Assistant coach Jason Holland said on Sunday that the All Blacks will call the changes if you choose your page for the third and last test against France.
In the second test in Wellington, an improved all Blacks exceeded an exhausted France 43-17 to seal the series with a game.
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New Zealand only made two changes to the start team, which achieved a 31-27 victory in the first test in Dunedin.
The day after the victory, Holland said that a new line-up in Hamilton in Hamilton on Saturday would be intended to remain loyal to a promise to give all 35 New Zealand squad members.
“The general attitude was to ensure that everyone in these three games gets an impression of test foot, so I think nothing will change there,” Holland told reporters on Sunday.
The team of the next week is scheduled to include the Ulb-HOCHER Brodie McAlister, the loose strikers Samipeni Finau and Luke Jacobson as well as Noah Hotham, Ruben Love and Anton Lienert-Brown.
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Holland was enthusiastic about the improvement shown in Wellington when the All Blacks opened a 29:3 lead against a far inexperienced France team, which left most of their players at home.
“We know that we have many, many areas that we have to be even better,” said Holland.
– Coaching Challenge –
“There will be no lack of motivation to get better and better, and I am sure that the boys will add something if they get their chance.”
In a second half in which France and New Zealand in France and New Zealand in France and New Zealand achieved a stricter French defense, both scored 14 points.
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“We had the feeling that we could have finished better in the last 20 minutes than we and you could really put away,” said Holland.
“We just have to have variations not to match things. That is the challenge of coaching these days, I think.”
Holland said Tupou Vaa’i was a doubt about the third test after the back on the back was not an initial evaluation of the head injury after it was replaced in the second half.
Vaa’i was an outstanding performer in the series and in both tests attempts to justify the decision to convert the athletic 25-year-old from Lock to the back row, where he won his first 38 All Blacks Caps.
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“It is exciting, I think Tupou obviously gives you another big man in your line -out, but he is also a mobile man and he is quickly in the park,” said Holland, pointing out that Vaa’i would continue his new role.
“He likes to record a shoulder defensively and has all the good properties of a number six, so I think it is really exciting.”
Holland said that Wing Caleb Clarke, who was replaced in the second test start-up site, will look “five to six weeks” after a training injury on the ankle injury.
It means that Clarke is excluded from the first two rugby championship tests in Argentina on August 16 and 23.
DGI/DH